36
36
Jul 19, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
quote 0
but do you love abraham lincoln, to appeal to the better angels of our nature, abraham lincoln would say so. >> in memorization in many ways might lead to greater understanding. let's take a look at the process that the boys at putney school go through. >> our fathers. >> brought forth. >> to the proposition. >> that all men are created equal. >> it ends up being a lot of work for a lot of them. but it has all sorts of tremendous effects. >> it does. you know they all suffer from some sort of learning difference. it might be dyslexia, disgraph disgraphia, adhd, but they are terrified with public recitation. some of them have language difficulties that make it hard to memorize or to speak. and so they help each other. it's a boarding school for kids that should be still at home. and they are held together by the loving kind isness of the school. the kids help each other and they sort of emerge from their struggles and it is such an amazingly inspirational thing that takes place here. >> especially son that day, when they go in front of the public and speak about it. let's see that. >>
but do you love abraham lincoln, to appeal to the better angels of our nature, abraham lincoln would say so. >> in memorization in many ways might lead to greater understanding. let's take a look at the process that the boys at putney school go through. >> our fathers. >> brought forth. >> to the proposition. >> that all men are created equal. >> it ends up being a lot of work for a lot of them. but it has all sorts of tremendous effects. >> it does....
76
76
Jul 25, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 76
favorite 0
quote 0
welcome, lincoln. >> thanks for having me. >> what does this resignation mean? >> this is not good for ukraine. he has been seen as a leader that's done a good job putting ukraine together and holding it together at a very difficult time. if you listen to what he said what you see is a couple of things, one great frustration, but this is the hard part of governing. it sounds like thing are tough, i can't get what i want through. so i am going to resign and we will call for new elections. some of the spin that you are getting out of kiev now, is this, well, this was part of what we were going to do anyway because we were going to have new elects, which is true. you always need new parliamentary i lexes but right now particularly in week they need governance. >> how many times can a country go through this sort of upheaval in its government system and survive? >> that's a very good question. this is a cycle that we have seen in lightly differently but never this intensity. the ukrainian apartment is 400 members, they back ships that in the past could be bought off
welcome, lincoln. >> thanks for having me. >> what does this resignation mean? >> this is not good for ukraine. he has been seen as a leader that's done a good job putting ukraine together and holding it together at a very difficult time. if you listen to what he said what you see is a couple of things, one great frustration, but this is the hard part of governing. it sounds like thing are tough, i can't get what i want through. so i am going to resign and we will call for new...
41
41
Jul 15, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 41
favorite 0
quote 0
lincoln mitchell specializes in peace in the middle east. he joins us from san francisco. professor mitchell what do you think the israeli cabinet is going to do? as the time arrived to accept some sort of ceasefire? >> yes, a ceasefire does work for israel right now, if there's a guarantee that hamas will not continue to fire rockets into israel. and if they get that, i think they will support a ceasefire. >> what about hamas. they have demonstrated they have thousands of rockets. and they have certainly met their goal to amass sympathy. any motivation on their part to accept the ceasefire? >> as you say, hamas has met their goal, which is to lose a few palestinian lives and gin up more anger and hatred towards israel. so they have achieved that goal. but neither side is driven entirely biological decision-making at that point. >> egypt brokers the last ceasefire in 2012. how do you see this taking shape? what should we be looking for over the next few days? >> well, this is a different egypt than in 2012. they are much less sympathetic towards hamas. but we use this term
lincoln mitchell specializes in peace in the middle east. he joins us from san francisco. professor mitchell what do you think the israeli cabinet is going to do? as the time arrived to accept some sort of ceasefire? >> yes, a ceasefire does work for israel right now, if there's a guarantee that hamas will not continue to fire rockets into israel. and if they get that, i think they will support a ceasefire. >> what about hamas. they have demonstrated they have thousands of rockets....
36
36
Jul 11, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
quote 0
i asked people to choose the abe lincoln they have seen but didn't tell them that all of the choices could be wrong. >> that's actually really eye opening. so could you assume by your wording and then just laying it out that, oh, it would be one of the options? >> i am going to go for b. >> none of them. >> it's none of them? ? >> the fact that i got it wrong and now that you tell me that the person wasn't even -- i mean, the penny wasn't even there, yeah, it makes me tremendously. >> scary. >> that's actually scary. isn't it? >> jonathan, one of the things that joe berlinger mentions in the documentary is that often eyewitness testimony is the gold standard in a criminal case. how much weight is really put on that of an eyewitness? >> you know, i think for any defense lawyer, there is no moment that makes your heart beat faster than when the witness points to your client and says, "that's the person who did it" because we understand that the jurors believe that people don't get identifications wrong. i think what we learned from the science, however, is that the memory can be contam
i asked people to choose the abe lincoln they have seen but didn't tell them that all of the choices could be wrong. >> that's actually really eye opening. so could you assume by your wording and then just laying it out that, oh, it would be one of the options? >> i am going to go for b. >> none of them. >> it's none of them? ? >> the fact that i got it wrong and now that you tell me that the person wasn't even -- i mean, the penny wasn't even there, yeah, it makes...
21
21
Jul 29, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
but i had the chance to sit in for one number with winton marsalis and jazz at lincoln center and one number with billy joel. these guys have lost my cell phone number. >> you are waiting? i am done at cornell. >> if you take that off of the table, i didn't really know what i was going to do after the presidency at cornell. >> you are a cardiologist. >> took care of, still do a little tiney bit teenagers and young adults with congenital heart disease. >> and tae kwon do? >> i was bet hitting things that don't hit back. >> you eliminated jazz and t tae kwon do and you decided to go into the smithsonian. the head of the smithsonian is secretary? >> right. >> tell me about this. how did this come being about? >> the smithsonian, to remind you and those watches, "talk to al jazeera" is very interesting organization and it encompasses 19 musems or galleries, the national zoo, nine research centers, literally, around the world. so, it's a research and education entity. that was one thing that was very, very attractive to me. another thing that was very attractive to me is the idea of workin
but i had the chance to sit in for one number with winton marsalis and jazz at lincoln center and one number with billy joel. these guys have lost my cell phone number. >> you are waiting? i am done at cornell. >> if you take that off of the table, i didn't really know what i was going to do after the presidency at cornell. >> you are a cardiologist. >> took care of, still do a little tiney bit teenagers and young adults with congenital heart disease. >> and tae...
79
79
Jul 5, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 79
favorite 0
quote 0
to president abe re ham lincoln who passed the grant to -- abraham lincoln who passed the grant to turned yosemite into the park. >> there are two images, battlefield and yosemite, an eden. >> reporter: if carlton watkins made yosemite famous in americas, it was they are that drove it to international heights, ansel adams. >> it's dramatic. not with a you would see. ansel says i'm giving you what i want you to see, not what you will see in nature. ansel adams and his intense black and whites. he used this instrument and other things to increase light in one area, decrease in another to make the photograph more dramatic. his son was born in yosemite. we took trips into the back country using borrows to carry the cameras and food and beds. >> no other artists would be inextricably tied in yosemite. as the park celebrates 150th birthday, a photograph shows there may be more variations on a theme. it's taken from the same spot where isn't sell adams stood decades earlier. >> it provide a yardstick against which you measure yourself and try to do some things that he hasn't done. yos 'em jipy's
to president abe re ham lincoln who passed the grant to -- abraham lincoln who passed the grant to turned yosemite into the park. >> there are two images, battlefield and yosemite, an eden. >> reporter: if carlton watkins made yosemite famous in americas, it was they are that drove it to international heights, ansel adams. >> it's dramatic. not with a you would see. ansel says i'm giving you what i want you to see, not what you will see in nature. ansel adams and his intense...
50
50
Jul 8, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
to president lincoln and turn yosemite into the first protected land. >> if you think about that moment 1863-4, there are two types of photographs. images of the civil war battle field, and images of yosemite. >> reporter: but as carlton watkins made yosemite famous, it took another photographer to bring it to new heights, ansel adams. >> photographers will say i'm giving you what i want you to see. >> ansel adams and his intense black and whites. >> and he used this instrument and other things to increase light in one area and decrease to make the photograph much more dramatic. >> his son michael adams was actually born in yosemite. >> they took backpacks into the backcountry using burros. >> no other artist will be so inextricably tied to yosemite. and yet as yosemite celebrates it's 150th birthday, one photograph will take on a new theme. it's the very same spot that ansel adams photographed. >> he said yosemites infinite variety means there will always be something new to discover here, and this place will remain for photographers for generations to come for inspiration as long as y
to president lincoln and turn yosemite into the first protected land. >> if you think about that moment 1863-4, there are two types of photographs. images of the civil war battle field, and images of yosemite. >> reporter: but as carlton watkins made yosemite famous, it took another photographer to bring it to new heights, ansel adams. >> photographers will say i'm giving you what i want you to see. >> ansel adams and his intense black and whites. >> and he used...
103
103
Jul 30, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
lincoln how was the play. >> he won is huge victory in 1968, reelected in 1962, the biggest land slide ever. he created the environmental application agency. a liberal on domestic affairs. and he had a breakthrough to china. vietnam was a downfall. unlike eyesen hower who pulled them out of china saying "game over." nixon mann ip ute lated that. the combo of vietnam and the watergate ranks him as the lowest. >> i know he never expected the tapes to go public. we skim the service. fascinating stuff in the book. i know you plan to do more later. >> 1973, then hague pulled the system out, and his presidency collapses. >> we look forward to that. good to see you. >> the book is "the nixon tapes", and it's available. >>> were dinosaurs extinct because the bad luck. facial features - a look at how smul expressions can drive first impressions. the data tif is next -- data dive is next. >>> today's data dive looks at first impressions. british scientists find the measurements of facial features and exchanges in your expression can predict how people react to you. these are important when peopl
lincoln how was the play. >> he won is huge victory in 1968, reelected in 1962, the biggest land slide ever. he created the environmental application agency. a liberal on domestic affairs. and he had a breakthrough to china. vietnam was a downfall. unlike eyesen hower who pulled them out of china saying "game over." nixon mann ip ute lated that. the combo of vietnam and the watergate ranks him as the lowest. >> i know he never expected the tapes to go public. we skim the...
41
41
Jul 25, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 41
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> north lincoln, you're falling below 90. wichita is going to feel warm, oklahoma city still 99 degrees there. we've been dealing with wildfires across parts of washington. we had a break with the rain and dualer temperatures moving through. while the rain is now pushing out, the temperatures over the next couple days are on their way up. we'll see 70's make their way towards the 80's over the next several days. >> start with one issue education... gun control... the gap between rich and poor... job creation... climate change... tax policy... the economy... iran... healthcare... ad guests on all sides of the debate. >> this is a right we should all have... >> it's just the way it is... >> there's something seriously wrong... >> there's been acrimony... >> the conservative ideal... >> it's an urgent need... and a host willing to ask the tough questions >> how do you explain it to yourself? and you'll get... the inside story ray suarez hosts inside story weekdays at 5 eastern only on al jazeera america >> nasa's goal to put ast
. >> north lincoln, you're falling below 90. wichita is going to feel warm, oklahoma city still 99 degrees there. we've been dealing with wildfires across parts of washington. we had a break with the rain and dualer temperatures moving through. while the rain is now pushing out, the temperatures over the next couple days are on their way up. we'll see 70's make their way towards the 80's over the next several days. >> start with one issue education... gun control... the gap between...
65
65
Jul 20, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
joining me is lincoln mitchell. he is advisor at columbian university. what do you make of the situation on the ground? >> it's not a great situation - obviously it's a terrible tragedy, and the investigation is not proceeding the way it should be. investigators don't have access, there's a reason they don't. there's information that needs to be withdrawn. they are probably looking to moscow for instructions "what do we do?" and they're probability not getting responses. >> who should be in charge. >> investigators who don't have access. who shouldn't be is separatists with backing from russia, with an agenda who probably took the plane down. >> how do you dissect the reaction? >> vladimir putin mishandled this. vladimir putin, although he played a disuctive role - this incident, the shooting of a passenger plane. it's not something that he wanted unless he has gone off the rails. >> once it happened he made a bad situation worse. the tragedy is a bad situation here. he made the situation worse. he began the line, the ukranian military shot the plane out
joining me is lincoln mitchell. he is advisor at columbian university. what do you make of the situation on the ground? >> it's not a great situation - obviously it's a terrible tragedy, and the investigation is not proceeding the way it should be. investigators don't have access, there's a reason they don't. there's information that needs to be withdrawn. they are probably looking to moscow for instructions "what do we do?" and they're probability not getting responses....
92
92
Jul 5, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
to president abraham lincoln, that turned the not guilties no the first protective land. >> if you think about the moment, 1863 ush, "4 ush. there are two photographs, images of yos 'em yinnie. >> if carton watkins made it popular in america. it took another to elevate its height. han sell adams. >> it's dramatic, but not what you would see if you looked at the imaging. they would say that's important. i'm giving you what i want you to see, not what you will see in nature. >> reporter: ansel and his intense black and whites. >> he used this instrument and other things to increase light in one area, or decrease in another to make the photograph more dramatic. >> reporter: his son michael adams was born in yosemite. >> we wept into the back country using burrows to carry the food and beds in yosemite. >> no other artist will be ipp extricably tied to yos 'em jipy, as the park celebrates, a photograph shows there may be more variations. it's taken on the same spot where adams stood. >> this provide a yardistic against which you measure yourself and try to do some things that you haven't don
to president abraham lincoln, that turned the not guilties no the first protective land. >> if you think about the moment, 1863 ush, "4 ush. there are two photographs, images of yos 'em yinnie. >> if carton watkins made it popular in america. it took another to elevate its height. han sell adams. >> it's dramatic, but not what you would see if you looked at the imaging. they would say that's important. i'm giving you what i want you to see, not what you will see in...
53
53
Jul 30, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 53
favorite 0
quote 0
lincoln how was the play. >> he won is huge victory in 1968, reelected in 1962, the biggest land slide ever. he created the environmental application agency. a liberal on domestic affairs. and he had a breakthrough to china. vietnam was a downfall. unlike eyesen hower who pulled them out of china saying "game over." nixon mann ip ute lated that. the combo of vietnam and the lowest. >> i know he never expected the tapes to go public. we skim the service. fascinating stuff in the book. later. >> 1973, then hague pulled the system out, and his presidency collapses. >> we look forward to that. good to see you. >> the book is "the nixon tapes", and it's available. >>> were dinosaurs extinct because the bad luck. >> a shocking america tonight investigative report... >> you take someones hopes and dreams of childhood, and then out right steal their money >> wishing to start a family >> we lost over $20,000 trying to do surrogacy in mexico >> but left with broken hearts and empty pockets >> how much money do you owe people >> around $350,000 >> praying on the vulnerable >> i have nothing to hi
lincoln how was the play. >> he won is huge victory in 1968, reelected in 1962, the biggest land slide ever. he created the environmental application agency. a liberal on domestic affairs. and he had a breakthrough to china. vietnam was a downfall. unlike eyesen hower who pulled them out of china saying "game over." nixon mann ip ute lated that. the combo of vietnam and the lowest. >> i know he never expected the tapes to go public. we skim the service. fascinating stuff...
92
92
Jul 5, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
to president abraham lincoln who passed the grant that turned yosimete into the first protected land? >> 1863ish, '4ish, images the of the of the civil war battlesfields and of yosemite, but if he made it famous in america, it took another artist more than half a century later to elevate yosemite to heights, ansell adams. >> it's very dramatic, but it's not necessarily what you would see if you looked at that image. and answer ansel would say that's important. i am giving you what i want you to see, not what you will see in nature. . >> ansil adams and his intense black and whites. >> and he used this instrument and other things to increase light in one area or decrease it in another area to make the photograph much more dramatic. >> his son, michael adams, was actually born in yosemite. >> we took pack trips into the ba back country using burros to carry the cameras and food and beds in yosism mite. >> no other artist will be so inextri trickbly tied to yosemite. as the park set blades its birthday one shows there may be more variations on a theme. it's taken from the same spot where
to president abraham lincoln who passed the grant that turned yosimete into the first protected land? >> 1863ish, '4ish, images the of the of the civil war battlesfields and of yosemite, but if he made it famous in america, it took another artist more than half a century later to elevate yosemite to heights, ansell adams. >> it's very dramatic, but it's not necessarily what you would see if you looked at that image. and answer ansel would say that's important. i am giving you what i...
45
45
Jul 5, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 0
., to president abraham lincoln who passed the grant that turned yosemite into the nation's first protected land. >> if you think about that moment, 1863ish, '4ish, there are two types of photographs, images of civil war battlefields and images of yosemite, this pacific eden. >> but as carlton watkins made yosemite famous in america, it took another artist more than half a century later to elevate yosemite to global heights. ansel adams. >> it's very dramatic, but it's not necessarily what you would see if you looked at that image. and ansel always would say, that's important. i'm giving you what i want you to see, not what you will see in nature. >> ansel adams and his intense black and whites. >> and he used this instrument and other things to increase light in one area or decrease it in another area, to make the photograph much more dramatic. >> his son, michael adams, was actually born in yosemite. >> we took pack trips into the back country using burros to carry the camera and the food and the beds in yosemite. >> no other artists will ever be so inextricably tied to yosemite and yet a
., to president abraham lincoln who passed the grant that turned yosemite into the nation's first protected land. >> if you think about that moment, 1863ish, '4ish, there are two types of photographs, images of civil war battlefields and images of yosemite, this pacific eden. >> but as carlton watkins made yosemite famous in america, it took another artist more than half a century later to elevate yosemite to global heights. ansel adams. >> it's very dramatic, but it's not...
101
101
Jul 13, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 101
favorite 0
quote 0
water laws in the land of lincoln. where powerful storms are headed today. >>> years of preparation, and it comes down to one game. international bragging rights at stake as argentina faces off against germany. >>> israeli forces blasting homs as they tart hamas for a sixth strait day of fighting in the gaza strip. welcome to al jazeera america. i'm morgan radford. families are packing the bags as the threat of new air strikes flew over the city. leaflets dropped over northern gaz aas more blasts are expected at any minute. this despite calls for a ceasefire. the number of dead reached 166 - all of them palestinians. many are innocent civilians. some are members of hamas, who israel is targetting. our team coverage takes us to the gaza strip , and that is where nick schifrin and stefanie dekker joins us live. first we start with stephanie. how are people escaping the violence. >> we are at a school run by the u.n. agency. i'm stepping out of shot. you see him. we were inside earlier, but they wanted us to move. they mo
water laws in the land of lincoln. where powerful storms are headed today. >>> years of preparation, and it comes down to one game. international bragging rights at stake as argentina faces off against germany. >>> israeli forces blasting homs as they tart hamas for a sixth strait day of fighting in the gaza strip. welcome to al jazeera america. i'm morgan radford. families are packing the bags as the threat of new air strikes flew over the city. leaflets dropped over northern...
94
94
Jul 9, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 94
favorite 0
quote 0
the largest recall affects the 2013 and 2014 ford taurus, lincoln mks and police interseptemberror distance. owners will be notified by next month. >> honda expanding its air bag recall, doubling the number to 1 million. passenger side air bags in early model cars can unexpectedly explode. the incidents happen where heat and humidity are high. >> pot smokers in washington state can legally buy we'd. the first time to buy was yesterday. >> it's awesome, we get to buy legal marijuana, man. >> it feels like a street party. hundreds of people wait to go spend money for the first time on legal recreational marijuana. >> this is freedom for the people who voted for this freedom. >> i want to check it out and just, you know, buy what they have, whatever sparks my interest, to support it and be a part of it. >> you want to be part of history. >> yeah. >> cannabis city, seattle's first pot store misses its planned opening by 15 minutes. >> it doesn't matter to the customers. >> it's like a candy store. it's like chocolate. you'll never get enough. >> prices are double the cost of marijuana medicine
the largest recall affects the 2013 and 2014 ford taurus, lincoln mks and police interseptemberror distance. owners will be notified by next month. >> honda expanding its air bag recall, doubling the number to 1 million. passenger side air bags in early model cars can unexpectedly explode. the incidents happen where heat and humidity are high. >> pot smokers in washington state can legally buy we'd. the first time to buy was yesterday. >> it's awesome, we get to buy legal...
151
151
Jul 15, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 151
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie rose: did you see the movie 'lincoln'? alex ferguson: yes. charlie rose: did you like it? alex ferguson: i didn't think that it was a great movie but i thought that the central piece about the period that it had to deal with was fantastic. the acting in that movie was unbelievable. charlie rose: by understanding that he had to do everything that he could -- push, pull, in order to get emancipation because that was the goal and he understood the consequences, so let's go all out for emancipation. alex ferguson: there was the situation at antium when he was able to announce emancipation, and winning that particular battle allowed to give that proclamation. it was such an important time. charlie rose: you are a kind of student of the civil war? alex ferguson: yes, i love it. i think that it is a great history, it's a young history. the funny thing about it is that i bought a couple of books when i was in chicago having a week's holiday. i went to a bookstore, and this is about 14-15 years ago now, and i picked these two books up. then later in i was in london doing a thing ab
charlie rose: did you see the movie 'lincoln'? alex ferguson: yes. charlie rose: did you like it? alex ferguson: i didn't think that it was a great movie but i thought that the central piece about the period that it had to deal with was fantastic. the acting in that movie was unbelievable. charlie rose: by understanding that he had to do everything that he could -- push, pull, in order to get emancipation because that was the goal and he understood the consequences, so let's go all out for...
31
31
Jul 10, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
as most recent book is called "the lincoln myth." it is pretty good. >> great to be here. >> this proposal by amazon -- it looks, great. it gives steve berry all of the money that he makes online. >> it makes no sense. hacettethe riders at are advanced riders. how they pay it back? from the sale books. hachette -- the money actually belongs to them. they are paying it back. amazon knows that. that is why this is almost a ridiculous offer. there is no way in the world that they would take it. if they did take it, all they would do is believed -- bleed them dry more. it was just a publicity stunt. look of us in the business at that offer and say it is ridiculous. >> tell us about the business. we're going to connect it with amazon. you're in new york for what? >> we have a thriller fest. we have 2600 members from around the world. it is a subject of conversation. are able topeople reach the level of success that you have had? >> i would say that i am probably in that one percentile. i started at zero percent. i voted up over 13 years.
as most recent book is called "the lincoln myth." it is pretty good. >> great to be here. >> this proposal by amazon -- it looks, great. it gives steve berry all of the money that he makes online. >> it makes no sense. hacettethe riders at are advanced riders. how they pay it back? from the sale books. hachette -- the money actually belongs to them. they are paying it back. amazon knows that. that is why this is almost a ridiculous offer. there is no way in the world...
61
61
Jul 1, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
that lincoln area is one point of distinction. mulally was ready to kill off lincoln, which was a lagging luxury blatt/-- lagging luxury brand. he thinks they can make something out of it. >> how do you think the two strategies will differ? how different are their management files? they worked together for so long. >> fields is a ford lifer who became an acolyte of alan oriented up the, team style. it will be interesting to see this jersey guy who's a bit of a street fighter, how he will set a different tone from alan mulally who is a cheerleader, boy scout type. >> we do have some exclusive sound from alan mulally talking about this transition. take a listen. >> i think i will maintain many of the great relationships i have. i have fallen in love with ford. it's a great company. it's so important what it does for the country and energy, security and what it does for the country. >> can mark call you anytime question work >> absolutely any time. >> that was the phone you were referring to. -- that was the bat phone you were referr
that lincoln area is one point of distinction. mulally was ready to kill off lincoln, which was a lagging luxury blatt/-- lagging luxury brand. he thinks they can make something out of it. >> how do you think the two strategies will differ? how different are their management files? they worked together for so long. >> fields is a ford lifer who became an acolyte of alan oriented up the, team style. it will be interesting to see this jersey guy who's a bit of a street fighter, how he...
88
88
Jul 1, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 88
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> what about the lincoln? >> fields has been saying let's keep lincoln and let's put money into a. they said they harris -- they said they are committed to it. i think we will see new vehicles rolling out in the next two years. f1 50ave to get the right. we will probably see a larger vehicle. >> i want to shift gears to general motors and yet another recall. the company.en by a lot of people are wondering when are the recalls going to and? -- one of the recalls going to end? >> will it hurt gm possibly an appeal? awaypeople start shying from the vehicles? we do not see evidence of that in the sales. we do not see evidence of it in the stock. the longer this goes on, you wonder will it have an a banging an impact.have >> people bring in their cobalt sin, which are terrible. into a vehicle is the hardest thing to do. it is a growing market. winter, we have seen more sales. i think you will see a jump anyways. over the next six months, do they pick up market share or do they stay stable with small growth? >> what
. >> what about the lincoln? >> fields has been saying let's keep lincoln and let's put money into a. they said they harris -- they said they are committed to it. i think we will see new vehicles rolling out in the next two years. f1 50ave to get the right. we will probably see a larger vehicle. >> i want to shift gears to general motors and yet another recall. the company.en by a lot of people are wondering when are the recalls going to and? -- one of the recalls going to...
73
73
Jul 24, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
oft does the consolidation media mean for someone like lincoln? >> it used to be hard to get distribution. to get your product in front of people used to be difficult. linkedin, facebook, twitter, the audience is there. we have built people in audience. tom is already in front of people who want to read what tom keene has to say. >> my word for the year is distribution and i totally agree with what dan is saying. microeconomics of distribution have financially changed -- foundational he changed because of linkedin and twitter. >> would you guys go into video? >> we do some video. we do business to business video. it is already working. what we find is that people do not necessarily want to sit in a cubicle, you might not want to watch video all day, or you can't without getting in trouble with your boss. we will get there, but right now, the written word is the way people are doing it. you want to read something quickly in line. it is written. >> the influencers are key to the written word. why don't i see them in my feed? i feel like you are not
oft does the consolidation media mean for someone like lincoln? >> it used to be hard to get distribution. to get your product in front of people used to be difficult. linkedin, facebook, twitter, the audience is there. we have built people in audience. tom is already in front of people who want to read what tom keene has to say. >> my word for the year is distribution and i totally agree with what dan is saying. microeconomics of distribution have financially changed --...
53
53
Jul 24, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 53
favorite 0
quote 0
ford is up in large part because of lincoln. they are trying to get the lincoln restarted. ford is selling down the current f series. they are in the same position gm was in trying to sell old trucks to make way for the new ones. ford will have a new truck coming out in the second half, so there is always that balance. andyes, gm is way down, that is why transactions are up, as well as having product people really want to buy. >> let's talk about weak spots in these countries -- ford says they are seeing a larger loss from south american operations. americanaid south sales fell 18% in the second quarter. how much does the u.s. and europe have to be to offset? >> well, for the past few years, the u.s. has been the bright spot. it will continue to be. we expect sales to be stronger this year than last, and we still see really good discipline in terms of supply and demand. so, you know, north america was southcarry the load, and america has forward guidance that it will not get a lot better there. europe is a weak spot, but ford certainly showed a lot of improvement with their
ford is up in large part because of lincoln. they are trying to get the lincoln restarted. ford is selling down the current f series. they are in the same position gm was in trying to sell old trucks to make way for the new ones. ford will have a new truck coming out in the second half, so there is always that balance. andyes, gm is way down, that is why transactions are up, as well as having product people really want to buy. >> let's talk about weak spots in these countries -- ford says...
60
60
Jul 23, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 60
favorite 0
quote 0
they still have the expedition and the lincoln navigator but they have not had a successful redesign in 10 years. what ford is doing now will give them a huge advantage down the road, and that is in the pickup truck . they have unveiled the new aluminum pickup truck. yet,are not selling it switching over in the factory to build that, but it's putting pressure on other carmakers, including gm, to start to pick up their pickup game. ford also reports tomorrow. you will see a lot of expenditures on producing this new aluminum to cut. >> no doubt we will hear from you tomorrow as those numbers come out. 26 past the hour, that means bloomberg is on the markets. julie hyman is standing by. whereyou take a look at stocks are trading, we have the s&p 500 at a record echoes of a couple of strong earnings reports. tech and health care doing well. boeing, however, pulling down the down right now. take a look at a couple of other individual stock we are also watching related to earnings. juniper is on the way down. falling the most in over three years after it forecast a recorder results that wi
they still have the expedition and the lincoln navigator but they have not had a successful redesign in 10 years. what ford is doing now will give them a huge advantage down the road, and that is in the pickup truck . they have unveiled the new aluminum pickup truck. yet,are not selling it switching over in the factory to build that, but it's putting pressure on other carmakers, including gm, to start to pick up their pickup game. ford also reports tomorrow. you will see a lot of expenditures...
62
62
Jul 9, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
his most recent book is called "the lincoln myth." >> great to be here. >> this proposal by amazon -- e-books, great. it gives steve berry all of the money you make someone. good, that? >> it makes no sense. most of the writers at hachette are advanced writers. they are paid in advance. the publisher risks. how do they pay it back? from the sale of books. if hachette was to take that offer and say, we will give all the proceeds to the authors, they already paid those authors. that money along to -- belongs to hachette. amazon knows that. that is why this is almost a ridiculous offer. there is no way in the world hachette whatever take it. if they did take it, all they would do is believed hachette -- even faster.e it was just a publicity stunt, one of those things. those of us in the business looking at that offer, it's ridiculous. >> tell us about the business. we are going to connect with what amazon is proposing. you are in new york for what? >> we are here for thriller fest. we gather the thriller community once a year. we have 2600 members over here. as is certainly a subject of
his most recent book is called "the lincoln myth." >> great to be here. >> this proposal by amazon -- e-books, great. it gives steve berry all of the money you make someone. good, that? >> it makes no sense. most of the writers at hachette are advanced writers. they are paid in advance. the publisher risks. how do they pay it back? from the sale of books. if hachette was to take that offer and say, we will give all the proceeds to the authors, they already paid those...
98
98
Jul 19, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 0
saw the film about lincoln and the emancipation proclamation. there is also a play here in new york about lyndon johnson. "all the way." about the craftsmanship of legislation. is that something that we have not had in last six years? in terms of the hard-nosed politics in order to get the kind of legislation you want. clearly it happened with health with the affordable care act but we have had a collapse in terms of these huge issues with the debt ceiling and budget. budget is a perennial problem, as we know. , whatny fair reading president obama and the leadership did with the white house demonstrates a constant effort to try and bring people to some kind of understanding that could lead to decision-making. it is not easy. >> at the end of the day, the proof is in the pudding. >> the affordable care act is a huge, historic accomplishment making a difference in the lives of millions of americans to the point that i believe it will be much less of an issue, which is important going into the mid-terms than it had been up until now because people
saw the film about lincoln and the emancipation proclamation. there is also a play here in new york about lyndon johnson. "all the way." about the craftsmanship of legislation. is that something that we have not had in last six years? in terms of the hard-nosed politics in order to get the kind of legislation you want. clearly it happened with health with the affordable care act but we have had a collapse in terms of these huge issues with the debt ceiling and budget. budget is a...
61
61
Jul 26, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
and all parties must bring their differences within the government, the lincoln type approach bringing people within the tent so that the country at large can be secured from the disputes of the elite is very important lesson. in iraq they practiced exclusion. they did not bring everybody together around the common table. they did not create the trust that is necessary for asshuring people that the government is not an instrument to be used against them but an instrument to work together for realization of common goals. >> what is your assessment of the taliban threat, and are you prepared to negotiate with them and how do you see the nature of those negotiations? >> a government of national unity means an end to all parallel governments. we must create the condition that there is only one government in afghanistan with the full legitimate mandate of the people that speaks for the country as such and looks at every afghan as being equal to another afghan. one of the slogans. the taliban both the word and we acknowledge are political reality of afghanistan. they cannot be wished away or
and all parties must bring their differences within the government, the lincoln type approach bringing people within the tent so that the country at large can be secured from the disputes of the elite is very important lesson. in iraq they practiced exclusion. they did not bring everybody together around the common table. they did not create the trust that is necessary for asshuring people that the government is not an instrument to be used against them but an instrument to work together for...
52
52
Jul 9, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 52
favorite 0
quote 0
i think the 1860's, if you look at some of those campaigns against lincoln, pretty polarized, and it started in the 70's, and we should be pulling out of it if you look at rough historical patterns of 30 years. i think what prevents us from pulling out is strictly institution. if you go to a dinner party in washington, on the left, there are academics and donors and think tanks, so they have got a real infrastructure on the left. on the right, a bunch of donors, think tax, -- think tanks, and they have got structure. in the middle, just lobbyists. there is no infrastructure. there is just a void, so if you are a politician and want to head out to the middle, there is just nobody there, but if you deviate from the right or left, there is punishment. i agree with david. i think it is institutional, but i would say one thing, and that is through history when we do pull out of the period like this, where there is intense hostility between the parties in congress, there has been, god forbid, some overwhelming foreign crisis or economic or social crisis in the country that calls everyone t
i think the 1860's, if you look at some of those campaigns against lincoln, pretty polarized, and it started in the 70's, and we should be pulling out of it if you look at rough historical patterns of 30 years. i think what prevents us from pulling out is strictly institution. if you go to a dinner party in washington, on the left, there are academics and donors and think tanks, so they have got a real infrastructure on the left. on the right, a bunch of donors, think tax, -- think tanks, and...
89
89
Jul 29, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 89
favorite 0
quote 1
. -- tony lincoln says that he expects to be working with the rebels and the ukraine. several european leaders were spoken to about the ukraine and gaza. fighting curves and mortgages. they may raise interest rates to rein in the housing market will stop that is according to a report from the imf that says that there is no sign of a bubble and the u.k. must tackle the homes to avoid financial risk for the housing market. ubs revealed the second quarter and cost-cutting. europe, we this in are joined now. good to see you. thank you for joining us. we are talking about deutsche bank and let us start with ubs. .t has been cutting costs your early thoughts? >> it is a bit more mixed, i would say. from cost-cutting charges in theer corporate sector. thing that a the bank does when it is in a defensive mode, almost, it you like. hand, the results are a touch week, i would say. the revenue generation on growth that you would like to see in a vibrant growth story. >> what about the net new money? we had a net new money outflow that some viewed as a bit of a surprise. wasent up
. -- tony lincoln says that he expects to be working with the rebels and the ukraine. several european leaders were spoken to about the ukraine and gaza. fighting curves and mortgages. they may raise interest rates to rein in the housing market will stop that is according to a report from the imf that says that there is no sign of a bubble and the u.k. must tackle the homes to avoid financial risk for the housing market. ubs revealed the second quarter and cost-cutting. europe, we this in are...
84
84
Jul 31, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 84
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> after the bell, lincoln, tesla, gopro. john kerry in india. >> this is showing the flag and repairing the relationship with mr. modi. an important trip away from all the other major challenges. is that the morning brief? day.en at fed day and jobs stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities -- futures -13. -98.utures euro under 1.34, and a lot of people have been hoping for a weaker euro. american crude oil under $100 a barrel. , will ithe angst, vix open near 14? yen, 102.82. we scoured the papers, here is a scarlet with the front page. time running out, it ran out, for argentina. standard & poor's says the country is in selective default, missing a deadline yesterday to pay 500 $39 million in interest. the question is whether holders will9 billion in bonds demand repayment. this is a small group of bondholders who refused restructuring 13 years ago. >> led by elliott management. >> and paul singer. they went to be paid $1.5 billion they say they were owed. >> the supreme court says they were owe to that, but argentina does no
. >> after the bell, lincoln, tesla, gopro. john kerry in india. >> this is showing the flag and repairing the relationship with mr. modi. an important trip away from all the other major challenges. is that the morning brief? day.en at fed day and jobs stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities -- futures -13. -98.utures euro under 1.34, and a lot of people have been hoping for a weaker euro. american crude oil under $100 a barrel. , will ithe angst, vix open near 14? yen, 102.82. we...
48
48
Jul 30, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 48
favorite 0
quote 0
>> i think jeff at lincoln -- linked in has done an amazing job. they have not stumbled. they have been under the microscope. >> you think they have been underrated? >> i don't know that they have been underrated. >> the stock has done well. >> the stock has done well and they have not had any big conflicts. it just works. he has done a gracefully. >> another silicon valley ceo is christian writer, ok cupid. "we experiment on human beings." >> they did what facebook did. they did a test to match up people who algorithms said were not good managers -- good matches to see if they could spur conversation, and in fact, they did. i think the reason people use ok get a matcht they that the algorithm says is a good match, so it is a bit of a disservice. >> but he said, get over it. >> i'm a huge believer in get over it. everybody should get over it. i think it is fine and they should move on. >> would you do it, too? >> i don't know that it would make much sense in our business, but we test all the time. >> and you don't like you need to tell anybody? >> no way. testing is part
>> i think jeff at lincoln -- linked in has done an amazing job. they have not stumbled. they have been under the microscope. >> you think they have been underrated? >> i don't know that they have been underrated. >> the stock has done well. >> the stock has done well and they have not had any big conflicts. it just works. he has done a gracefully. >> another silicon valley ceo is christian writer, ok cupid. "we experiment on human beings." >>...
63
63
Jul 9, 2014
07/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 63
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> uber is about being in a lincoln town car or maybe even a mercedes, and suv -- >> you can be in a camry. >> you can if you take uberx, their cheapest audit, designed to compete with lyft. a camry, accord. that is what lyft offers. that is not what any of us is likely to take, although, tom keene did the other day. existed, we were taking taxis are the somewhat or god forbid the bus, i was a camry is better. >> i agree. taxis are totally uncomfortable, poorly regulated, awful inefficient system and hopefully, these two companies and their competitors break that system. lyft is a different service. it is for brooklyn and queens, places you should really go. lyft will be the lower-priced class there. manhattan,ays in probably tribeca or upper east side, and she's going to be in the suv. >> i'm getting doggone. >> brooklyn is way hipper than where i live. >> i love the bk. >> as the taxi limousine commission said anything? >> i'm sure the taxi and limousine commission probably has a lot of clout, especially with the de blasio administration. but they are a big political force, and t
. >> uber is about being in a lincoln town car or maybe even a mercedes, and suv -- >> you can be in a camry. >> you can if you take uberx, their cheapest audit, designed to compete with lyft. a camry, accord. that is what lyft offers. that is not what any of us is likely to take, although, tom keene did the other day. existed, we were taking taxis are the somewhat or god forbid the bus, i was a camry is better. >> i agree. taxis are totally uncomfortable, poorly...
338
338
Jul 29, 2014
07/14
by
CNBC
tv
eye 338
favorite 0
quote 0
designed the lincoln memorial. 16,000 square feet. bigger than jane's. got 24 rooms. 6 fireplaces, 9 bedrooms. the ground sits on seven, anote a 56-foot pool. the poolhouse, don't have vampires but 100-year-old grapevines growing on the ceiling of the poolhouse. amazing to see, and the guest costage, its own greenhouse. all this, carl, can you yours for a mere $17.7 million. a quarter of the price of jane's property, and it's bigger. >> ah, that's right. i imagine you can probably -- >> but mine's better. >> jane, what? >> reporter: mine's better. >> i'm assuming, jane -- >> of course it is. >> you probably get more use of the pool where you are, year-round. right? >> reporter: 365 days of year of this. the thing about malibu as opposed to the hamptons, a lot of people with houses actually live here year-round. you're not far from l.a. the traffic in mag blibu is bet than the traffic in the hamptons. >> no question about that. >> where is kayla on this? >> i like the water view. robert, look great, house beautiful. turn the camera around and show us the
designed the lincoln memorial. 16,000 square feet. bigger than jane's. got 24 rooms. 6 fireplaces, 9 bedrooms. the ground sits on seven, anote a 56-foot pool. the poolhouse, don't have vampires but 100-year-old grapevines growing on the ceiling of the poolhouse. amazing to see, and the guest costage, its own greenhouse. all this, carl, can you yours for a mere $17.7 million. a quarter of the price of jane's property, and it's bigger. >> ah, that's right. i imagine you can probably --...
70
70
Jul 14, 2014
07/14
by
CNBC
tv
eye 70
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> pop for lincoln, up 2%. >> for a company people worried about saturation point of the addressable audience, deals like this, it's an interesting deal for them, $2 million subscribers, they'll be sending updates and news alerts on people in your contact list. it's interesting, by the way, a couple of founders are paypal founders. they're getting a double bite of the cherry. >> drop gt, it was down 5%. >> that was on the headline there was going to be some supply disruption or pushback for the iphone 6. so if one of the things that the iphone is having trouble with is a front panel makes that front panel, you could obviously see collateral damage here. there was a short interest of 32%. be very careful with a name like this. don't overstay your welcome on the short side. >> starting today, pizza hut customers with a sweet tooth can enjoy a pizza cookie, roughly the size of a small pie, it can be split into eight slices. partnering with hershey's chocolate, hoping it'll be a big hit with millennials. likes to leave room for dessert. >> it's not a pizza, first of all. >> it's a cookie
. >> pop for lincoln, up 2%. >> for a company people worried about saturation point of the addressable audience, deals like this, it's an interesting deal for them, $2 million subscribers, they'll be sending updates and news alerts on people in your contact list. it's interesting, by the way, a couple of founders are paypal founders. they're getting a double bite of the cherry. >> drop gt, it was down 5%. >> that was on the headline there was going to be some supply...
61
61
Jul 24, 2014
07/14
by
CNBC
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
abraham lincoln saw the building of the transatlantic railway in the middle of the civil war. >> ed and tony, thank you very much for joining us. and just once again to remind everyone, steve leesman's exclusive interview with the president. that is today. cnbc obviously. 5:00 p.m. eastern. make sure you tune in. it is the busiest day so far of the early season with 50 s&p 500 companies reporting alone. >> and caffeine king is roasting dunkin' donuts over its dismal quarter. also a facebook twitter debate. in today's market, a lot can happen in a second. with fidelity's guaranteed one-second trade execution, we route your order to up to 75 market centers to look for the best possible price, maybe even better than you expected. it's all part of our goal to execute your trade in one second. i'm derrick chan of fidelity investments. our one-second trade execution is one more innovative reason serious investors are choosing fidelity. call or click to open your fidelity account today. your studied day and night for her driver's test. secretly inside, you hoped she wouldn't pass. the thought
abraham lincoln saw the building of the transatlantic railway in the middle of the civil war. >> ed and tony, thank you very much for joining us. and just once again to remind everyone, steve leesman's exclusive interview with the president. that is today. cnbc obviously. 5:00 p.m. eastern. make sure you tune in. it is the busiest day so far of the early season with 50 s&p 500 companies reporting alone. >> and caffeine king is roasting dunkin' donuts over its dismal quarter....
178
178
Jul 21, 2014
07/14
by
CNBC
tv
eye 178
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> as of january 2012, dennis kozlowski was living in the lincoln correctional facility in new york. in april of 2012, he lost his first parole bid, and his next possible parole board hearing won't be until the late summer of 2013. that's it for this edition of 60 minutes on cnbc. i'm morley safer. thank you for watching. [ticking] >> narrator: in this episode of "american greed"... making movies and making money. >> it was good money. and i didn't think it was ever gonna end. >> narrator: mac parker lives and works in vermont. but his moneymaking mojo is straight out of hollywood. >> i would sometimes raise as much as $150,000 a week. >> narrator: there's just one problem -- if his movie costs less than $1 million to make, why is parker raising $28 million? >> it was discovered that less than a nickel of every dollar that was being invested was actually spent towards the creation of the movie. >> i put everything i had, every penny i had into the film, which really put me in a real jam. >> narrator: so where's the cash going?
. >> as of january 2012, dennis kozlowski was living in the lincoln correctional facility in new york. in april of 2012, he lost his first parole bid, and his next possible parole board hearing won't be until the late summer of 2013. that's it for this edition of 60 minutes on cnbc. i'm morley safer. thank you for watching. [ticking] >> narrator: in this episode of "american greed"... making movies and making money. >> it was good money. and i didn't think it was...
89
89
Jul 28, 2014
07/14
by
CNBC
tv
eye 89
favorite 0
quote 0
this company, i'm -- when it came out, stephanie lincoln, she and i co-run -- >> co-trust. >> we had a tiff last week. she said the way these industrials are acting, even if cummins raises numbers, raises guidance, it may not matter. it comes out this morning, i say darn it the trust sold it they raised -- great number, they raised it. it didn't matter. this is what i've been worried about in the market. is that nothing is enough for the industrials now. i mean maybe it's because housing got weak in. owens corning was bad, armstrong, people feel that though cummins put out a release saying the truck business is great in north america, it not enough. the buyer want too much from the industrials. this is a bad sign. it's a bad sign for the market, that cummins isn't up five. >> and what -- what do i -- if i'm -- if i'm aware of that being a bad sign and i'm an invest investor, what else am i keep ang eye on to see if this a pat zblern pe pattern. >> tech is the next. microsoft's churning its wheels, intell's been churning its wheels, not seeing the next leg up. micron reported good num
this company, i'm -- when it came out, stephanie lincoln, she and i co-run -- >> co-trust. >> we had a tiff last week. she said the way these industrials are acting, even if cummins raises numbers, raises guidance, it may not matter. it comes out this morning, i say darn it the trust sold it they raised -- great number, they raised it. it didn't matter. this is what i've been worried about in the market. is that nothing is enough for the industrials now. i mean maybe it's because...
165
165
Jul 16, 2014
07/14
by
CNBC
tv
eye 165
favorite 0
quote 0
it t was down about 40 cents and stephanie lincoln and i have been going back and forth. i said gun to my head, i'm going to buy some here. i think there's a reason why carl icahn stayed with this stock. i don't think there's a lot of alpha there, but i think the reason he stayed is he likes what he heard from the board and from the leadership over there at ebay. so, if it's good enough for uncle carl, it's good enough for me, mel. >> is it good enough for bob dole? >> yeah, my view is the earnings and the business, the revenues are decelerating. we've seen that. that was reported earlier. and the question is, is the value underneath it via carl icahn going to come out some way, somehow? to answer that, question, it's going higher, but on a fundamental basis, i think it's a hum. >> melissa, what's interesting is are the carl icahns of the world heroes? are they villains? does it depend on the stock. >> it depends how you measure it, i think, kelly. i think what we've been talking about at the desk for quite some time is the tremendous amount of success that carl icahn has
it t was down about 40 cents and stephanie lincoln and i have been going back and forth. i said gun to my head, i'm going to buy some here. i think there's a reason why carl icahn stayed with this stock. i don't think there's a lot of alpha there, but i think the reason he stayed is he likes what he heard from the board and from the leadership over there at ebay. so, if it's good enough for uncle carl, it's good enough for me, mel. >> is it good enough for bob dole? >> yeah, my view...
72
72
Jul 29, 2014
07/14
by
CNBC
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 0
it reminds me of when president lincoln said to general mcclellan, if you're not going to use your army, do you mind if i borrow it? there comes a time in washington when speaker boehner should use his authority to solve some of our problems. >> understood, senator. we will leave it there for now on these thorny issues facing congress and we'll see if we have any movement before the recess. senator dick durbin of illinois, a state personally affected, we should say, by these inversion issues. thank you so much for your time. >> thank you. >>> we have a news alert on ibm and bertha coombs has the details. >> ibm electing two new board members to their board of directors. alex gorske, the ceo and chairman of johnson & johnson and peter voser, the former chief executive of royal dutch shell, who now serves as the director of roche holdings. so, a little bit of health care coming on there. mr. gorske will be a board member effective september 1st and mr. voser's election will take effect on january 1st. back to you. >> bertha, a busy hour for you. we really appreciate your coverage on all o
it reminds me of when president lincoln said to general mcclellan, if you're not going to use your army, do you mind if i borrow it? there comes a time in washington when speaker boehner should use his authority to solve some of our problems. >> understood, senator. we will leave it there for now on these thorny issues facing congress and we'll see if we have any movement before the recess. senator dick durbin of illinois, a state personally affected, we should say, by these inversion...
82
82
Jul 21, 2014
07/14
by
CNBC
tv
eye 82
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> lincoln. >> high end cars. >> all right our guest host this morning, you know, i don't know how many mercedes he has or how many drivers, mohamed el-erian, former pimco ceo, now the economic adviser to allianz. if you're working three days a week, that's probably -- we're probably overestimating now that you're sort of just a big muckatety muck retirey. are you still working hard? you're not running pimco. >> i'm working hard but working differently and a lot more time to spend with my daughter. >> see. that's nice, isn't it? >> it is. >> that's like working less. >> you get a new dog, you still got -- is everything okay dogwise? >> we've got two dogs. >> i know we both have had, you know, if you have dogs. >> issues. >> you do have issues. >> as investors watch the latest developments out of russia, ukraine, the middle east, and futures, we have the ten-year. that's what we're looking at down 39 points today. we closed on the dow at 17,100. almost exactly 248 on the ten-year. which has so many different things going into that yield at this point. it really is almost a global yi
. >> lincoln. >> high end cars. >> all right our guest host this morning, you know, i don't know how many mercedes he has or how many drivers, mohamed el-erian, former pimco ceo, now the economic adviser to allianz. if you're working three days a week, that's probably -- we're probably overestimating now that you're sort of just a big muckatety muck retirey. are you still working hard? you're not running pimco. >> i'm working hard but working differently and a lot more...
102
102
Jul 25, 2014
07/14
by
CNBC
tv
eye 102
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> in the lincoln tunnel, there's the line. >> that's true. we could probably do it in the tunnel, but it's probably more complicated to do the big swerve. >> well, i don't think you can do it on the gw bridge any more. >> joe, i may stop by to see your place in the afternoon just to give a hug before you take this vacation. >> you know, that would be fine. stop by this afternoon. we're leaving at 11:00. so come on by. we're really not leaving at 11:00. you can stop by. let's look at the oil markets today. 102. 11. up 4 cents. 2.5% on the ten-year. take a quick look at the dollar. 1.34. that's almost time, sorkin, almost time. 1.34. >> what are you waiting for? >> 1.30. i'm not paying $22 for a croissant. i can't. >> you'd rather pay $18. >> yeah. and a little smidgenon of coffee. they call that coffee. what is that? and there is gold which is now below $1,300. unfortunately, the geopolitical -- did you see russia? >> yes. >> is this for real? >> that's what i was wondering. the story in the "wall street journal" today is that russia is firing
. >> in the lincoln tunnel, there's the line. >> that's true. we could probably do it in the tunnel, but it's probably more complicated to do the big swerve. >> well, i don't think you can do it on the gw bridge any more. >> joe, i may stop by to see your place in the afternoon just to give a hug before you take this vacation. >> you know, that would be fine. stop by this afternoon. we're leaving at 11:00. so come on by. we're really not leaving at 11:00. you can...